Format : Sheet musicLangue : Français
Voici une partition musicale pour Trombone et plus spécialement pour Trombone Et Piano (Tenor) que vous pouvez acquérir pour moins de 10C. Classée dans la catégorie Classique, cette partition dont le titre est RITE a été composée par le célèbre compositeur Gartenlaub Odette. C'est l'éditeur Billaudot sous la référence GB2196 qui a les droits pour éditer cette partition. / Trombone Et Piano (Tenor) / Partition
SKU: GI.G-4020
Text Source: vs. of sprinkling rite. Text by Rory Cooney.
SKU: HL.4004207
UPC: 888680062651. 9x12 inches.
The premier performance of The Rite of Spring in 1913 is the stuff of legends. There are disagreements amongst the people who attended whether it was the music or the choreography that caused the near-riot in the audience. Since then The Rite has been performed regularly and is considered to be one of the most influential works of the 20th century, laying the basis for modern jazz, film music and even heavy metal. It's all here: the driving rhythms, the haunting Russian folk melodies, the brilliant scoring, the crunching harmonies and the epic drama! The intention with this arrangement for band was to stay as true as possible to the original and choose the sections that would work well in this context. Sure to become a valued and important addition to the wind band repertoire! Duration: 6:30.
SKU: HL.48019885
UPC: 884088275785. 6.75x10.5 inches.
The final two movements in a cycle of four songs characterizing the wind, Wind Sprite reflects the personified wind as being playful and mischievous. The fourth piece, No Wind, is aleatoric with wind chimes and piano and First-Nation Cahto text, using fragments of syllables.
SKU: GI.G-5404
Text Source: Cooney, Rory, penitential rite from Sacramentary. Text by Rory Cooney.
Daigle has arranged and combined Cooney’s hymn “Now†with the third penitential rite, which he adapted from the hymn, creating a unified gathering rite. The edition features five sets of invocations for the penitential rite.Â
SKU: GI.G-4762
Text by Rory Cooney.